[Porto-pm] Linguagens em declínio

Tiago Faro Pedroso tfpedroso at gmail.com
Mon Oct 27 10:50:12 PDT 2008


<ironia>É bom saber q a UM permanece na vanguarda </ironia>

Gostei bastante da cadeira obrigatória 'aplicações em rede' na FCUP,  
mas compreendo que seja desnecessária para os alunos da U Vinho... ;)

Tiago Faro Pedroso
tfpedroso at gmail.com

On 2008/10/27, at 17:23, Alberto Simões  
<albie at alfarrabio.di.uminho.pt> wrote:

> 1o semestre: Haskell
> 2o semestre: C
> 3o semestre: Prolog
> 4o semestre: Java
>
> E estou a ensinar Perl no mestrado de Engenharia de Linguagens.
>
> Abraços
> Alberto
>
> Paulo A Ferreira wrote:
>> Que linguagens ensinam na UM globalmente nestes dias?
>> Paulo
>> Alberto Simões wrote:
>>> Ignorancia!
>>>
>>> Sérgio Camacho wrote:
>>>> O que acham disto?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> **
>>>>
>>>> *
>>>> *
>>>>
>>>> *Skills in Ancient Languages Valued Less*
>>>> /Financial Times Digital Business (10/22/08) P. 5; Nairn, Geoff/
>>>>
>>>> Some IT skills, while clearly not dead yet, are certainly being put
>>>> out to pasture. For example, the once-hot fourth-generation
>>>> programming language PowerBuilder is now largely forgotten by many
>>>> employers. Foote Partners CEO David Foote says PowerBuilder is  
>>>> one of
>>>> several programming languages in long-term decline, including
>>>> Hewlett-Packard's variant on the Unix language, HP-UX, Perl, and  
>>>> C. IT
>>>> workers skilled in these declining languages have seen their pay
>>>> levels drop by 11 percent or more in the past 12 months,  
>>>> according to
>>>> Foote Partners' latest survey. Foote says C is not going to go away
>>>> because it is widely used in embedded devices, but there is no need
>>>> for businesses to have someone write applications in C. Even some
>>>> newer IT skills are already finding themselves less and less in
>>>> demand. For example, Wireless Markup Language (WML), which became
>>>> popular about eight years ago as a way of creating mobile Internet
>>>> sites that could be viewed by early mobile browsers, is already in
>>>> decline. Over the last 12 months, as mobile devices continue to  
>>>> become
>>>> more powerful, the market value of WML skills has dropped 12.5
>>>> percent. Another popular skill that is fading away is Novell  
>>>> Netware,
>>>> which has since been overwhelmed by the rapid rise of Microsoft
>>>> Windows, which comes with built-in networking. Foote says that  
>>>> demand
>>>> for Microsoft and open source skills are on long-term upward  
>>>> trends,
>>>> and notes that year-on-year comparisons can be influenced by
>>>> short-term supply trends.
>>>>
>>>> View Full Article
>>>> <http://us.ft.com/ftgateway/superpage.ft?news_id=fto102120081037527538 
>>>> >
>>>> | Return to Headlines <#top>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --- 
>>>> --- 
>>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>>
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>
> -- 
> Alberto Simões - Departamento de Informática - Universidade do Minho
>                 Campus de Gualtar - 4710-057 Braga - Portugal
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